Ἄρης
Indie Greek God of War Ares RP blog
FC: David Boreanaz
OC Friendly - Multiverse
Page still under construction

ofshxeldarchive:

MY FAVOURITE trope is the 

“leave all your weapons”
*takes out far more weapons than expected (or logically able to carry)*

nikolomachiavelli:

Modern Mythology: Apocalyptic War Female Ares

I am the god of war.
Insatiable for battle,
I overwhelm, destroy
and slaughter men.
With Fear and Terror
chained to my chariot,
I spread war, danger (X)

ambivalentaboutmarmite:

sophiealdred:

astoldbygengar:

lets just be clear, if you spend the time baking a cake/cookies/brownies, you can eat as many of them as you want and the calories don’t count. you made those calories. you’re their god.

disclaimer: this does not apply to children you have made

looking at you Kronos

dragonfiretwisted:

Greek Mythology Dreamcast - Daniel Sharman as Phobos & Ben Barnes as Deimos

Deimos was the god (daimon) of fear, dread and terror, and his twin-brother Phobos of panic fear, flight and battlefield rout. They were sons of the god Ares, who accompanied their father into battle, driving his chariot and spreading fear in their wake. As sons of Aphrodite, goddess of love, the twins also represented the fear of loss.

In classical art the two were usually represented as youths. Phobos was sometimes depicted with a lion or lion-like head…(x)

queenfattyoftherollpalace:

Why

roleplayerscoffeeshop:

Reblog if your character is mythology-based (Greek, Norse, Egyptian, etc.) or if you’re willing to RP with characters who are!

image

image

image

image

Someone should give me Sarah Michelle Gellar as Athena bc tbh it’d be pretty funny seeing her and Ares go at it.

“When you’re facing down multiple attackers, you always want to make the first move. It lets them know that you’re ready to fight and that you’re crazy enough to get the party started. One rule of thumb in fighting is that crazy can often overcome skill and numbers, because, while a trained fighter might actually enjoy going up against another trained fighter, no one really wants to wrestle with crazy. Crazy doesn’t know when it’s winning. And crazy doesn’t know when to stop. If you can’t pull off crazy, if, for instance, you’re handcuffed in a small van with six armed assailants, stupid is a decent substitute for crazy.”

Richard Kadrey, Sandman Slim (via faith-and-trust)

fantasieswriter